a way of conducting research to measure cause and effect, where one variable is made to change (IV), and one variable is measured or observed (DV) , all other variables are keft constant
participants are randomly selected
- high level of control
- easy to replicate so that reliability can be checked
- low ecologicall validity (doesnt reflect a real life setting)
- problems of demand characteristics ( when participants know they are being studied they may act in a certain way and affect validity)
the variable the psychologist manipulates and controls to see how it affects behaviour
the variable which is measured (usually the participants behaviour) by the psychologist
a broad statement about what the reseach is intending to investigate
- be focussed
- be feasible
- be researchable
- use specific language
ensuring all variables are in a form that can be easily measured
predicts the kind of difference ( more or less ) or relationships ( positive or negative) between two groups of participants or between different conditions
specifically used when previous research suggests a direction
people in IV CONDITIONS will score higher/lower on operationalised DV than people in IV CONDITION 2